Riding the bus (2024)

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Updated Mar 12, 2024

Find out how to board and ride New York City buses, what the fare is, how to find schedules and routes, and more.

About New York City buses

There are several kinds of buses in New York City, including:

  • Local buses
  • Select Bus Service (SBS) buses, which make fewer stops, travel on priority routes, and board at all doors.
  • Limited (LTD) buses, which look like local buses but make fewer stops. Look for "LTD" on the front of the bus, and purple signage at bus stops.
  • Express buses, which look like coach buses and run between boroughs. Many operate only during weekday rush hours.

All MTA buses are accessible for riders who use a wheelchair. See our guide to accessible bus travel for more details.

Here are schedules and maps for bus routes.

For real-time service information, maps, schedules, and more, download the MTA app.

Tips for riding

  • Don’t block seats or aisles.
  • When your stop is approaching, push one of the mounted yellow tape strips, pull a yellow cord along the windows, or press a red stop button on one of the grab bars.
  • Exit through the rear doors.
  • Keep seats at the front available for people who need them. It is required to surrender accessible seats upon request.
  • Don’t stand in the stairwell or doorway while the bus is moving.
  • For help planning a trip, call 511. You can also use your preferred relay service provider, or the free 711 relay.

About bus fares

OMNY is accepted on all New York City buses. Fares can also be paid with a MetroCard, coins, or SingleRide ticket.

  • Local, SBS, and Limited buses: $2.90 for most riders
  • Express buses: $7for most riders

Some buses are fare-free:

  • Q70-LaGuardia Link to and from LaGuardia Airport
  • Starting September 24, 2023, we will pilot fare-free service on theBx18A/B, B60, M116, Q4 (Local & Limited), and S46/S96. Read more about the fare-free bus pilot.
  • People who are 65 or older, or who have a qualifying disability, are eligible for reduced fare.
  • The OMNY fare-capping program does not apply for express buses.
  • You can’t use a regular Unlimited Ride MetroCard on express buses. You can only use a 7-Day Unlimited Express Bus Plus MetroCard.

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Ways you can pay the fare

Local and limited buses

With OMNY

  1. Board through the front doors and tap your contactless credit or debit card, smartphone, or wearable device at the OMNY reader, a rectangular screen near the driver.

With a MetroCard

  1. Board via the front door.
  2. Insert your MetroCard into the farebox near the driver, with the front of the card facing you and the black strip on the right.

With exact change in coins

  1. Board via the front door.
  2. Insert exact change into the farebox.

Express buses

With OMNY

  1. Board through the front doors and tap your contactless credit or debit card, smartphone, or wearable device at the OMNY reader, a rectangular screen near the driver.

With a MetroCard

  1. Board via the front door.
  2. Insert your MetroCard into the farebox near the driver, with the front of the card facing you and the black strip on the right.

SBS buses

With OMNY

  1. Skip the sidewalk kiosks and board through any door.
  2. Tap your contactless credit or debit card, smartphone, or wearable device at the OMNY reader as you enter.

With a MetroCard

  1. Look for ticket kiosks on the sidewalk, near the bus stop.
  2. Press the start button.
  3. Insert your MetroCard as shown on the kiosk.
  4. Take the paper SBS ticket that the machine prints.
  5. Keep the ticket with you through your trip.

With exact change in coins

  1. Look for a sidewalk kiosk that has a slot for coins instead of a MetroCard.
  2. Insert exact change. (Maximum 25 coins. No change provided.)
  3. Take the paper SBS ticket that the machine prints.
  4. Keep the ticket with you through your trip.

If the SBS MetroCard Fare Collector machines at a stop are out of service, please board the bus and get a ticket at a MetroCard Fare Collector machine with your MetroCard when you exit the bus.

Bus stops

Most bus stops are marked with a tall, round sign with a bus symbol and route number. (MTA lingo for these signs is “lollipops.”) Some stops also have bus shelters. Some bus stops are marked with a blue, rectangular sign with a bus symbol and route number (some older express bus stop signs are green).

How to board the bus

Stay on the curb until the bus stops and the doors open.

Some buses “kneel,” or tilt down toward the curb, so passengers can board more easily.

Requesting a stop during late nights

From 10 p.m. to 5 a.m., you can ask your bus operator to let you off at locations that aren't bus stops. They'll find a safe place along the route to stop the bus.

You can only request stops on local bus routes and express bus routes in their non-express segments.

This service is not available on SBS or LTD buses, the nonstop segments of express bus service, or shuttle buses.

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Bus stop signs have route numbers printed on them, with a bus icon printed in a circle on top.

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Look for bus stop signs to know where to board. Some stops have bus shelters and some don’t.

How to use OMNY on a bus

  • Tap your contactless credit or debit card, smartphone, or wearable device at the OMNY reader as you enter.
  • On local, limited, and express buses, you must enter and use the reader at the front door. On SBS buses, enter at any door and use the reader there.
  • If you are using a phone or other mobile device, you may need to open your "wallet" app, depending on your device.
  • Express Mode on Apple phones does work with OMNY. Just tap and go.

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OMNY lets you pay your MTA bus fare with your phone, credit or debit card, or other wearable device.

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The OMNY reader can be found immediately after entering the bus.

How to use a MetroCard on a bus

  • Hold your MetroCard with the logo on the front facing you, with the black magnetic strip on the right side.
  • Insert your card into the farebox. Your fare will be deducted automatically and your card will pop back out.

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Insert your MetroCard with the logo facing you and the magnetic strip on the front right side of the card.

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The farebox is directly in front of you as you board.

How to transfer

Using OMNY

You don’t need a paper ticket to transfer to another bus. Use the same card or device throughout your journey and transfers will be applied automatically. OMNY is available on all MTA-operated local, limited, and Select Bus Service routes in New York City, as well as express buses.

With a MetroCard

You can transfer for free from one local bus route to another local bus route or any subway train. (The transfer gets encoded on your MetroCard. You’ll swipe it again, but you won’t be charged.) Transfers are good within two hours of when you paid the fare.

With exact change

If you paid in coins, you can transfer from a local bus on one route to a local bus on another route, if the routes intersect, within two hours of paying the fare. You do this by showing a printed transfer. Ask the bus operator for a transfer if you need one.

Other tips

  • Transferring to an express bus from a local bus or the subway just costs the fare difference.
  • If you transfer from a local to a Select Bus Service bus, make sure to get an SBS ticket from a sidewalk kiosk before you board.
  • Some buses have Designated Open Stroller Areas. If your bus does not, you must foldstrollers before you board and keep them folded during your ride.
  • Bus drivers can help you, but please stand back and do not talk to them while the bus is in motion, and be mindful of other passengers.
Riding the bus (2024)

FAQs

What is the riddle about the bus? ›

You are a bus driver, 8 people get on, 2 people get off, 2 more people get on and another 1 get off. Finally, 3 more people get on and 2 get off again. How old is the bus driver? Answer: Whatever your are (you're the driver).

Is it correct to say "riding a bus"? ›

Both the sentences are correct and mean the same thing. RIDE here means “to travel in a vehicle, especially as a passenger”. “I'm riding a bus" is common in American English. “Ride" is normally used as a transitive verb in the sense mentioned above in this variety of English.

Is it riding on or riding in? ›

Usually, you should use in when you are talking about a small vehicle or a personal vehicle. Use on when you are talking about a large vehicle or a public vehicle. An exception to this is when you are talking about a bicycle or motorcycle. For small vehicles like those, use on.

What is the answer to the bus puzzle? ›

So, the answer to the riddle is that the bus is going in the left direction on US roads and the right direction on Indian and UK roads. This brain puzzle is just another fun way to test your IQ.

How do you solve a riddle answer? ›

The model essentially describes the four steps people take to solve a puzzle:
  1. Identify a key feature in a pattern;
  2. Figure out where that feature appears in the sequence;
  3. Come up with a rule for manipulating the feature;
  4. Check whether the rule holds true for the entire pattern.
Mar 4, 2021

What is the answer to the riddle a bus driver goes the wrong way? ›

Tricky Transit Riddle: A bus driver goes the wrong way on a one-way street. He passes the cops but they don't stop him. Why? ANSWER: He was walking.

What is a riddle question? ›

Riddles are of two types: enigmas, which are problems generally expressed in metaphorical or allegorical language that require ingenuity and careful thinking for their solution, and conundra, which are questions relying for their effects on punning in either the question or the answer.

What goes around the world but stay in a corner? ›

Answer: Something that goes around the world yet stays in a corner refers to a postage stamp. It is a riddle that refers to a difficult question that is asked by people for fun and the answer is amusing.

Is it ride the bus or take the bus? ›

Take the bus suggests getting to a destination, Ride the bus suggests the state if being on the bus, more than emphasizing the destination. ride bus would generally not be used. As a command, one might say ride the bus.

Which is correct, in a bus or on a bus? ›

Use "on" for large vehicles which you can stand and walk around in (a bus, an airplane, a train, a metro/subway car, a cruise ship, a boat). Use "in" for (usually) smaller vehicles or crafts that you have to enter and sit in (a car, a taxi, a truck, a helicopter, a canoe, a kayak, a small boat, a carriage, a rickshaw).

Can I say I am in the bus? ›

Both “I am in the bus” and “I am on bus” are grammatical correct. However, “I am on the bus” is more commonly used in English to indicate someone' s location within a vehicle. “I am in the bus is still understandable but my sound more awkward or less natural to native awkward or less natural to native English speakers.

Do you say "riding on a train"? ›

“On the train” is the most common way to describe riding a train. Compare it to flying, most people would say, “I'm on the plane” not “in the plane” unless they are smuggling themselves in the cargo hold.

How do you use riding in a sentence? ›

MY 16-year-old daughter wants to go horse riding. Cycling, riding, motor sports and hunting were all far more popular pastimes. The Spanish riding school is actually in Vienna.

Is riding past tense? ›

To ride is an irregular verb. Ride is the present tense, rode is the simple past, ridding is the present participle, and ridden is the past participle.

What is the riddle of the bus driver apples? ›

Before he left, he gave Sarah seven apples. Why did the bus driver give Sarah seven(7) apples? An apple a day keeps the doctor away!

What is the answer to the wheels on the bus? ›

The wheels on the bus go chat, chat, chat. The wipers on the bus go round and round. The people on the bus go waa, waa, waa. The horn on the bus go swish, swish, swish.

Can you identify the direction in which this bus is moving left or right? ›

Brain Teaser Answer

As you we can't see the door in the image, which means that the bus is going in the “Right” direction and not the left. This works in countries where you drive on the left side of the road, like the India and UK; it would be the reverse in countries where you drive on the right side, such as the US.

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